ANNUAL NATALIE MAYER AND RAPHAEL LEMKIN LECTURE
Undesirables: Forced Mobilities and Internments in Mediterranean Bande Dessinée
April 2, 2024 | 7:00 pm
Presented by Professor Aomar Boum
Scandinavian Cultural Center, AUC
This event is free and open to the public.
Professor Aomar Boum, The Maurice Amado Chair in Sephardic Studies in the Departments of Anthropology, Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, and History at the University of California, Los Angeles, will be our Lemkin Lecturer on Tuesday, April 2, 2024 at 7:00 pm in the Scandinavian Cultural Center, AUC.
The lecture will be preceded by a brief presentation of the Lemkin Essay contest winner’s paper.
Does a Mediterranean bande dessinée exist? I contend that a well-established genre of Mediterranean comics and bande dessinée have been created and developed by artists and authors from around the Mediterranean Sea for decades. These comics inform our understanding of the historical and social dynamics of the Mediterranean social, cultural and political zone. They offer an artistic way to explore and grapple with the complex legacies of conflict, labor camps, colonialism, and nationalism as well as the opportunities and challenges of contemporary life in the region. In this talk, I propose reading Mediterranean waterscapes and geographic landscapes through comics of colonial conscripts (Senegalese tirailleurs and Moroccan goumiers) and WWII refugees. I coin Mediterranean bande dessinée of mobility and internment as a reference to a natural multinational artistic project with an educational orientation to evaluate colonial pasts and postcolonial relations between both sides of the Mediterranean landscapes. MED-BD has the capacity to challenge deceptive unrepresentative photographic reportage and journalistic writing and humanize internees and refugees of WWII in North Africa and today’s migrants in Europe. The MED-BD has developed into a repository of visual stories that challenge pictorial archives of photographers and filmmakers about southern Mediterranean landscapes.
About Professor Aomar Boum
A historical anthropologist and member of the Academy of the Kingdom of Morocco, Aomar Boum is Professor and Maurice Amado Chair in Sephardic Studies in the Department of Anthropology, Department of History and Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at the University of California, Los Angeles. Co-founder and co-editor of Tamazgha Studies Journal, Boum is interested in the place of religious and ethnic minorities such as Jews, Baha’is, Shi’a, Amazigh, and Christians in post-independence Middle Eastern and North African nation states. A native of a Saharan community in southeastern Morocco, Boum has interdisciplinary training in anthropology, history, Middle Eastern and North African studies, and Judaic Studies. Co-founder and co-director of Moroccan Jewish Studies Initiative at UCLA, his work is focused on diverse aspects of North African Jewish-Muslim relations, and specifically on the way in which social interactions between these two communities have been understood in the historical center (Middle East) and in the periphery (Sub-Saharan and North Africa). In addition to Memories of Absence: How Muslims Remember Jews in Morocco (2013), Boum is co-editor of The Holocaust and North Africa (2019) and Wartime North Africa: A Documentary history, 1934-1950 (Stanford University Press, 2022) as well as author with artist Nadjib Berber of the graphic history: Undesirables: A Holocaust Journey to North Africa (Stanford University Press, 2023). Boum is a member of the Academic Committee of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and a Faculty Fellow at Université Internationale de Rabat, Morocco. Website: https://www.aomarboum.com/